The Citizen (KZN)

Bela Bill stalls at Council of Provinces

- Marizka Coetzer

There was a sigh of relief yesterday after the Basic Education Laws Amendment (Bela) Bill process was delayed at the National Council of Provinces (NCOP).

AfriForum Youth yesterday picketed outside the department of basic education to protest against the Bela Bill, holding posters with slogans such as “Afrikaans schools are our right” and “Bela is bad”.

“We hope it’s the beginning of the end for the Bill,” AfriForum Youth spokespers­on Louis Boshoff said.

“The fact that better attention is being paid to parliament­ary procedures also shows public pressure is succeeding in preventing Bills from being lightly steamrolle­d.”

Boshoff said they were concerned about the risks this Bill posed for Afrikaans education, as it placed the power to change a school’s language policy in the hands of provincial heads of education.

“Although the latest amendments now give school governing bodies the initial decision on language and admissions policies, the final approval still rests with the provincial head of education.

“These amendments do little to allay concerns about political interferen­ce.

“Regardless of the intentions of the current heads of education, Bela offers the opportunit­y for someone with ill intentions to deal a tremendous blow to Afrikaans in public schools, and we cannot let this continue without opposition,” he said.

Boshoff said the battle against Bela was a battle for the preservati­on of the Afrikaans language.

John Nkosi, a car guard working outside the department while AfriForum picketed, said AfriForum Youth had a right to fight for their mother tongue.

Afrikaans was a good language and helped him communicat­e with Pretoria residents, he said.

“It doesn’t help to learn isiZulu, because you can’t use it everywhere.

“But in English and Afrikaans, you can communicat­e.”

Nkosi said the government should be focussing on other things.

Dr Wynand Boshoff, Freedom Front Plus MP and chief spokespers­on of basic education, said the controvers­ial Bill had suffered an unexpected setback at the NCOP because it was not published on the prescribed parliament­ary list of announceme­nts, tablings and committee reports (ATC).

“All documents to be considered by parliament must be published on the ATC list,” he said.

“The Bill has to be correctly published before the NCOP can consider and adopt it.

“Then it will be referred back to the National Assembly.”

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